The largest dinosaur footprint ever found has been discovered in 'Australia's own Jurassic Park'

On a 25-kilometer stretch of coastline in Western Australia lies a prehistoric treasure trove.

Thousands of approximately 130 million-year-old dinosaur footprints are embedded in a stretch of land that can be studied only during low tide, when the sea — and the sharks and crocodiles that inhabit the region — can't hide them.

"Nowhere else has as many types of dinosaurs represented by tracks than Walmadany does," Steve Salisbury, a paleontologist at the University of Queensland and the lead author of the study, said in a video describing the area.

Included among those many dinosaur tracks is the largest dinosaur footprint ever found. At approximately 1.75 meters long (about 5 feet, 9 inches), the track came from some sort of giant sauropod, a long-necked herbivore.

"We see a unique dinosaur fauna that includes things like stegosaurs and some of the biggest dinosaurs to have ever walked the planet, gigantic sauropods," Salisbury said in the video. This was the first evidence of stegosaurs found in Australia, according to the researchers.

There are also tracks from meat-eating theropods that walked on two feet and left three-toed prints with shapes similar to those represented in the film "Jurassic Park."

The three-toed prints have a special significance: In local lore, the tracks belong to Marala, or "the Emu Man," who journeyed through the region, creating laws that dictated how people should behave.

In a press release announcing the findings, Salisbury described the other types of dinosaur tracks discovered.

"There were five different types of predatory dinosaur tracks, at least six types of tracks from long-necked herbivorous sauropods, four types of tracks from two-legged herbivorous ornithopods, and six types of tracks from armoured dinosaurs," he said.

The University of Queensland researchers were brought in more than five years ago by the aboriginal Goolarabooloo community. The Western Australian government had selected the region as a processing site for liquid natural gas, and the local groups wanted experts to help protect the region by showing what was at stake.

The area was designated a National Heritage site in 2011, and two years later it was announced that the gas production project wouldn't happen.

Since no equipment could be left out when the tide came in, the researchers used drones to map the area with digital photography and laser scans. According to Salisbury, they spent more than 400 hours out on the coast.

"It's such a magical place — Australia's own Jurassic Park, in a spectacular wilderness setting," he said in the press release.